Sixth Sunday in Easter - Lemons!!!
Fifth Sunday in Easter - Love is like bread.....
Fourth Sunday In Easter - Plainly?!!!
Reflection for Easter 4
“Cold, cranky, walking around trying to keep warm. Surrounding by mutterings and questions – always the same one: ‘Tell us, plainly, are you the Messiah?’”
Plainly?!!!
Isn’t that what he has done – what’s plainer than actions? Actions speak louder than words at any time, in any place. People who are ill are healed, people who are hungry are fed, people who are lonely welcomed, people who feel shamed forgiven, people who are reviled, rejected are accepted. The list goes on. In his actions, Jesus has shown clearer than words could ever do that he is indeed the Messiah.
You can ask the same question as many times as you like, says Jesus, but the answer will always be the same. And on that cold winter’s day, with a tinge of frustration, Jesus declares: ‘it doesn’t matter what I say – or do – you will never believe.’ A sad indictment to those people gathered around Jesus of Nazareth on that cold winter’s day – in the temple dedicated to one of the greatest Israelite kings, Solomon. But of course, it could have been that this was not the answer they really wanted!
Maybe their idea or image of the Messiah, the Saviour, was of a figure of great mighty earthly power who would overthrow the oppressor (Rome), restore the fortunes and prestige of those who were oppressed.
And of course, they were out of luck. The Messiah’s power and authority is based on a bottomless well of love, empathy, kindness, justice – all the characteristics that the questioners did not want to hear. And maybe, there’s a sneaking wish for us today that the answer be different.
Because God’s good news in Christ, for those who choose to hear the voice of the risen Christ and respond, means an opening up of our own ears to the same cries of help that Jesus heard.
Of listening and responding. Today, the telling of good news, as always, as it always has been, is founded on actions – helping people find jobs, for a roof over their heard, enough food on the table, joy in friends and family, comfort in sorrow and anger – for everyone to have a home.
Christ’s words are Christ’s actions – we who follow can do no less.
Blessings
Ceri
Third Sunday in Easter - Do you love me?
Second Sunday in Easter - My Lord and my God
Reflection for Easter 2 – My Lord and my God
Jesus said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.” John 20:27
In a real way I can connect with Thomas after my experience of isolation. Thomas had not the advantage of the other followers of Christ. He hadn’t been there when the risen Christ had appeared to the others. He had missed out – rather like I missed out on Easter this year! And he wanted the same experience his friends had!
In that closed and locked room after the crucifixion, Jesus appears suddenly to his closest followers for the second time. And it was the invitation from Jesus to Thomas that opened Thomas’ eyes. In all the pieces of art work that I have seen about ‘doubting Thomas’ (including the one shown from Caravaggio c. 1602), Thomas is pictured as poking his finger in the hole in Jesus’ side as Jesus calmly looks on. But the reading from John’s gospel does not actually say that Thomas did this. But Thomas has been saddled with the prefix ‘doubting’ for many centuries.
What Thomas says is much more important! Immediately after the invitation from Jesus he says with the deepest of conviction:
“My Lord and my God.”
My Lord and my God. The wonderful moment when everything changes for this human being. And for many, many others as Thomas lived from then on determined to bring to others the good news of the risen Christ – Lord and God.
So I give thanks to that Thomas from long ago. For his demand to share the same experience his friends had.
I give thanks for the risen Christ, our Lord and our God, who welcomed his closest friends to touch, see and reach out his wounds – an intimate and vulnerable invitation even in resurrection.
May we all have the courage to let/demand that God see our own wounds and ask for the radical kind of healing that the risen life brings with the confession on our hearts, minds and lips:
My Lord and my God.
Blessings
Ceri
Easter Sunday - Let the Ladies Go (and tell the Good News)
Reflection for Easter Day 2022 – Let the Ladies Go (and tell the Good News!)
Well, I should know better, I suppose! My last reflection was a remembering of past Easters – both good and not so good memories.
I could not have anticipated that this one would be spent in isolation – and the subsequent yearning and deep feeling of missing out!
But this is our new normal, and really, why would I expect that everything would automatically go as planned!
Certainly, the women in Luke’s gospel who walked to the tomb in the dawn of that first Easter morning, taking their prepared spices, would not have expected their lives to be completely turned upside down on this day. They had been the only followers to remain at the cross, watching while Jesus drew his last breath. They must have been a sombre but faithful party that early morning as they walked to the burial place, prepared to anoint the body.
But changed their lives were. Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James and the other women with them – when confronted with the empty tomb and two dazzlingly-clothed messengers - all suddenly remembered what Jesus had told them while he was still alive.
In that instance, everything changed for them – what had been told had come true – or more aptly – what had been promised had come to pass, had been delivered. No wonder they were initially terrified!
And I suppose you could not blame the ‘apostles’ for their disbelief and dismissal of the women’s ‘idle tale’. But at least one – Peter – was disturbed enough to run to the tomb to discover the amazing truth for himself.
Wherever this Easter finds you - particularly if you are like me with my strong case of FOMO - I pray that this Sunday you feel some of that amazed joy of those first witnesses to the fulfilment of God’s promise.
He is risen indeed!
And in memory of those wonderful women – and all things female and Easter ‘eggy’ – catch the wonderful work of Let the Ladies Go! - the rehoming of laying hens considered ‘spent’ after laying every day for 18 months.
Blessings
Ceri
Palm Sunday - Let Us Pray
Fifth Week in Lent - "Leave her alone..."
Fourth Week in Lent - A very merry unbirthday to you....
Reflection for Lent 4 – A very merry unbirthday to you
Then the father said to him, “Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. But we had to celebrate and rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.” (Luke 15:31-32)
This section from the parable of the prodigal son in Luke’s gospel reminded me of the un-birthday. When Alice (in Wonderland) stumbles across the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party she is told they are celebrating the unbirthday:
A very merry unbirthday
To me?
To you
A very merry unbirthday
For me?
For you
Now blow the candle out, my dear
And make your wish come true
A very merry unbirthday to you
David Mack / Hoffman Al / Livingston Jerry
It’s explained to Alice that the ‘unbirthday’ is the day of the year that IS NOT your birthday – in other words 364 days of the year! So counting one’s own birthday, this means that every single day of the year is a party!
In Luke’s parable, the obedient and ‘good’ son is jealous and resentful that his father is holding a great feast to celebrate the return of the black sheep of the family - his brother. The father has behaved with wild inappropriateness; firstly by rushing down the driveway to greet the returning son with wide open arms; secondly demanding that the servants bring fresh water and clothes for the dirty and ragged man; and thirdly ordering a huge feast for all to celebrate his son’s return.
When asked by the ‘good and obedient’ son why HE has never been allowed to give such a feast for his friends, the father appears astonished. Because whatever the father has, this good son also has – every day has been a cause for celebration for the good son in being with his father. Every day has been an unbirthday for the good and obedient son! The returning son has been lost in a world that did not recognise the joy and grace of every day –lost in a world where good times could only be had at the expense of goods and services. Which ran out as quickly as the son’s inheritance ran out, reducing him to poverty and enslavement.
It might be a bit of a stretch to imagine our God, or Christ as the Mad Hatter, but Lewis Carroll’s tale makes me wonder what life would be like where people celebrated the presence of each other every single day with the grace of the wildly inappropriate father!
So, a happy unbirthday to you and a happy unbirthday to me?
Blessings
Ceri
Third Week in Lent - To Blame or Not To Blame
Reflection for Lent 4 – To Blame or Not To Blame
“Do you think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all the other Galileans? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish as they did” (Luke 13:2-3)
The idea that people suffer because they are worse sinners than anyone else is ‘put to death’ (excuse the pun) by Jesus when he is confronted with the stories of groups of fellow Galileans dying suddenly – whether by Roman soldiers or a large tower falling.
We are saturated with news every single day of people suffering through no fault of their own. And, like the people around Jesus of Nazareth, we want to know why this happens. At the heart of this question we might see two poles of motivation.
The first, most obvious, is the need to know how to avoid the same fate. If we know why this suffering happens, we can avoid it happening to ourselves and those we love.
The second is the deep empathy many of us feel when we hear or see this suffering and the desire to do something to alleviate the pain of others. What some have called the ‘deep pastoral ache’ in us.
And quite often, the result is we want to blame someone/something – to transfer our own pain.
Jesus refuses to allow those around him to avoid facing the truth of their mortality and of the uncertainty in living in the world.
They will die, and most likely at a time not of their own choosing – ‘you will all perish as they did’.
So, Jesus says, don’t put off what you need to do, trying to find excuses to avoid facing this reality. Turn back to God – ‘repent’ – now! There is nothing more urgent in this life.
Today, many have had the stuffing of certainty knocked out of us. And there appears to be a culture of blame solidifying in its place.
Refusing to allow blame to fill the hole in us is not easy. Turning back to God, listening to God, will maybe show us things we do not want to see about ourselves – ‘take the log out of your own eye before you complain about the speck in your neighbour’s eye’.
What would life be like if we stopped concentrating on blame and just got on with making things better for people?
I was struck by the recent news article by an academic living in Kyiv in this terrible time. The author had noticed a remarkable increase in acts of kindness by the citizens towards each other in the last couple of weeks. Sharing where to get needed supplies, ushering people to the front of queues for medicines based on need. The list of acts of kindness went on.
May we listen to the voice of the One who knows no blame and asks us to turn and follow.
Blessings
Ceri
Second Week of Lent - let us demand?
Second Week of Lent - Let Us Demand?
“A wandering Aramean was my ancestor….” Deuteronomy 26:5
‘And Abram said, “O Lord God, what will you give me….?” Genesis 15:2
The story of Israel’s wandering ancestor Abram, who became Abraham, has been exercising my mind this week.
In church on Sunday one of our readings will be from the book of Genesis, and we will be hearing of Abram being visited by God who says to him, ‘your reward will be great’. Now Abram has already received many blessings from the God who sent him off on his wandering journey – a wife, possessions, slaves and flocks of animals.
But Abram wants to know what this reward will be (he really wants a child to inherit all his wealth).
There is a sense that Abram is saying ‘all right…prove it to me’ – it could be said that Abram has a smidgeon of distrust or disbelief as to whether God can really provide the reward.
It could also be said this is the height of disrespect and a really dangerous thing to challenge God. But I find myself being inspired by this ‘Abram who became Abraham’ - who demands to know from God what will be provided. And in Abraham the reward is provided (not without a few wrong turns that are part of life).
Abram’s demand is a reminder that God wants a real and deep relationship with us where we trust enough that our real and deep needs are going to be heard. There is risk on both sides of such a relationship – vulnerability and failure as well as faithfulness and perseverance. Which as followers of Christ we see in the journey to the cross.
Maybe this Lent – with all the highs and lows that we are going through – might be the time where we take a leaf out of Abram’s book.
If our relationship with God is one of passive acceptance or a deeply buried distrust that God can actually do something, we risk standing up and demanding: ‘here we are Lord…help us and show us how we can truly help others!”
Blessings
Ceri
First Week of Lent - Walking through the wilderness of this world
Lent Week 1 – Walking Through the Wilderness of this World
Collect for the First Sunday in Lent:
O saving God, who led your people through the wilderness and brought them to the promised land: so guide us that, following our Saviour, we may walk through the wilderness of this world and be brought to the glory of the world which is to come; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen (APBA, p 483)
It seems a strange thing. To be sitting in my study, with the late afternoon sun shining, my cat Ed lying on the table with me, contented and asleep. But on this day, Shrove Tuesday 2022, I cannot be at peace.
In this part of the world we have experienced a catastrophic amount of rain. Lives have been lost. Homes destroyed. Businesses ruined. In four short days, our part of the world has received over six months worth of rain. A storm event that no one could have predicted.
There is a deep sense of mourning, and it feels very much as though I and others are ‘walking through the wilderness of this world’ with the Russian threat of nuclear war, Covid and the many other hurts and sorrows that the world faces today.
As we begin together our Lenten journey, the act of spending 40 days in the wilderness feels acutely present and near as never before.
And we travel with Christ, God’s Son, who has walked this journey before – quite alone and beset by evil.
We pray for God’s guidance and for comfort and peace for all who are suffering at this time.
I was reminded two days ago that even in the midst of a downpour, some of God’s creatures are able to find joy. A small park at the bottom of my suburban street had become a temporary lake – and some found this a boon too good to resist – see the attached picture. Thank you Tim (photographer) for the ray of sunlight!
Blessings
Ceri
Last Sunday in Epiphany - to judge or not to judge
Last Sunday in Epiphany – To judge or not to judge
Why do you see the speck in your neighbour’s eye, but do not notice the log in your own eye?
Luke 6: 41
On the last week of Epiphany, before we enter the sacred space and time of Lent, we hear Luke’s Jesus telling varied stories about those who judge others without turning a spotlight on their own behaviour. It appears that to follow Jesus requires a piercing look at one’s own life and actions BEFORE judging the behaviour of others!
The pause of such self-examination could well take a whole lifetime, which would mean that there would be no occasion for an opportunity to examine and pronounce judgement on another’s behaviour!
It’s possible that Luke could have intended for such a message to be imparted to those listening to his words. Who knows?
But like many others today, I watch and hear with a strong sense of helplessness the breaking news of the invasion of peaceful Ukraine by their much larger Russian neighbour. And I cannot help but decide that judgement and condemnation MUST have a place in following the way of Christ.
Luke’s Jesus was critiquing destructive behaviour between neighbours – of which hypocrisy was the focus for this week’s reading. Hypocrisy is a FORM of violence against another, with the perpetrator ignorant of their own failings.
In our globalised society, we are all neighbours, connected with each other in a complex web of economic and trade relationships. What is happening today could well have been exacerbated or encouraged by the behaviour of wealthy nations in the past in some way. By a hypocritical turn of policy which prevented real consequences being visited upon violent actions which may have prevented a future return of such violence.
We are called to be alert constantly to our own motivations in our own governance – painful business sometimes – but so necessary if we really want to participate in a world where our most vulnerable neighbours are cared for – in God’s kingdom.
My prayers for our Ukrainian sisters and brothers living in fear for those they love.
Ceri
Epiphany 7 - 'Cancel-Culture' and the Sermon on the Plain
Reflection for Epiphany 7
Cancel-Culture and the Sermon on the Plain
‘Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Do not judge, and you will not be judged; do not condemn and you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven.’ Luke 6:36-7
‘Cancel-culture’ - the recognition that society (usually on-line) will exact accountability for offensive conduct by on-line shaming and withdrawal of support for an individual (usually a celebrity) – has as many detractors as it has supporters since it became a popular phenomenon in 2019.
Detractors as diverse as Donald Trump and Pope Francis criticize cancel-culture – albeit for different reasons. The politician seeing it as a form of totalitarianism and a political weapon used to shame people forcing submission, while the Pontiff sees it as a form of ‘ideological colonisation’ that squashes debate over important issues and a diversity of identity.
Its supporters see it as a vehicle where people who have been marginalized for generations are able to ‘call-out’ offensive and discriminating conduct by powerful people. Where marginalized people and groups can be finally heard.
Still others see it as behaviour almost as old as time, where those in power have utilised ‘cancel-culture’ to hide histories of injustice by silencing or persecuting protestors.
In Luke, chapter 6, Jesus warns his followers plainly that working for the kingdom will lead to persecution by those who have power – a sure sign that they are doing God’s work.
In the second part of the sermon, Jesus counters against a (natural) desire for vengeance when faced with hostility.
“Love your enemies, do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return” (Luke 6:35)
And in a final warning against hypocrisy when judging others; first ‘take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbour’s eye’.
It is all too easy to ‘cancel’ someone or some group in 2022 with just the push of a button. The much harder job is sitting down with our own ‘log’ of attitudes/assumptions and dealing with our own murky history before learning about what ‘specks’ might be in our enemy’s eye.
Maybe, with Christ’s help, when we learn to forgive the enemy in own lives, we may be reader to forgive the other.
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany 6 - Bruce Willis, Jesus and the dolphin
Reflection for Epiphany 6
‘Blessed are you when people hate you, and when they exclude you, revile you, and defame you on account of the Son of Man. Rejoice on that day and leap for joy, for surely your reward is great in heaven…’ Luke 6:22-23a
Some things in life, it seems, people love to hate. Nominations for what I call the ‘anti-Oscars’ – the Razzie Awards – are out. Now in their 42nd year, these nominations are for the worst films and worst performances of 2021. Now I wouldn’t have thought there would have been much production in a year riddled by a pandemic, but I was surprised to read that Bruce Willis has managed to perform in nine (yes 9) movies last year! And as someone critics love to hate, he has been granted a category all of his own with all nine performances nominated!
So, it would seem safe to assume that Bruce Willis won’t be jumping for joy when the vote comes in!
For Luke’s Jesus, following him is certainly not a popularity contest – and in fact he warns that it could lead to being deeply hurt, excluded, reviled and defamed! It would seem that Jesus is warning his followers that they should be braced for something much worse than a Razzie nomination!
On a more serious note, this warning can throw some light on the religious discrimination bill and an attempt of some to exclude students from education facilities based on their gender identity. For such people attempting to do this, the backlash they experienced could be seen as vindication that they are on the right path in following what they believe Jesus taught. And could result in a hardening of their belief that such discrimination is right and correct and in line with the reign of God.
But in our reading from Luke’s gospel this week, Jesus clearly states that any backlash or hate experienced is the result of working to alleviate poverty, oppression and discrimination in the name of the One who welcomes all. And when such work is done, and the backlash happens, the followers of Christ should leap with joy – God is with them.
Which reminded me of the footage of the rescue of a dolphin from shallow water in Port Philip Bay this week.
As the dolphin, finally free and literally ‘wobbling’ its way out towards the bay (its fin rocked from side to side like it was unbalanced), it looked like it was going to get lost once more as it veered back toward the shore. An anxious rescuer tried to swim close enough to head it off.
Then it happened – a flash of its body, a little splash – and the dolphin disappeared beneath the water.
Rescuers reported the absolute joy (‘everyone was so, so happy’) they felt when they saw the splash and dive – sure signs that the dolphin was free!
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany 5 - I am what I am.....
Reflection - Epiphany 5
Last of all, as to someone untimely born, Christ appeared also to me. For I am the least of the apostles, unfit to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. But by the grace of God I am what I am… 1 Corinthians 15:8-10
I’m not a natural gardener – the colour of my thumb hovers closer to the dark end of the visible spectrum. However, I was disheartened to see one plant which I had been nurturing back to health missing all its leaves one morning! My dismay turned instantly to blaming some wandering possum as I removed the plant and placed it inside for some desperately needed plant triage.
It wasn’t until a couple of days later and a closer inspection that I discovered the culprits. Five incredibly fat and beautifully camouflaged caterpillars had been gorging themselves. With disgust I pulled them off the plant and threw them outside onto the concrete path – thinking they’d be a juicy morsel for some lucky birds.
Later in the day my husband commented that he’d observed one remaining survivor almost at the garden edge, looking ready for an assault on the herb garden. He removed it back onto the concrete. To his astonishment, he noticed later that it was once more poised at the garden’s edge – this time heading for the budding rocket seedlings.
At that point, I said that it deserved to be left alone, and we wondered out loud what kind of butterfly it might eventually become – a very large and peppery looking one I thought - if it managed to get to the rocket!
And after all, a caterpillar’s got to do what a caterpillar must do!
“I am what I am”, says Paul in our reading from Corinthians this week. But not in a self-congratulatory, ‘that’s what nature intended’ kind of way. As someone who deserved to be condemned as a persecutor of the people following Jesus Christ, Paul likens himself to the lowest of the low – ‘someone untimely born’ (how I initially felt about those caterpillars). And yet, through the grace and love of God, Christ appeared to him and Paul marvels at his transformation by this appearance of grace into an apostle! A proclaimer of the good news of Christ.
God’s baptismal promise and gift to us all is a life that is graced and transformed by Christ’s presence and companionship. Whether that is like the lightning bolt of Paul’s experience on the road to Damascus or the very slow realization of something different about ourselves as we journey along life’s road growing in Christ’s presence.
It may help to be like the very hungry and tenacious caterpillar in my garden – ask and you shall receive!
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany 4 - The Builder
Epiphany 4 – The Builder
Jeremiah 1:4-10
Psalm 71:1-6
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
From my study window I’m watching a house being built. It’s a rather large house, built for a family. I watched and heard the previous house being demolished, and then a week or so later the slab and concrete hole for the pool were poured. The frame went up pretty quickly, then all was quiet over Christmas.
Scaffolding came next and within a couple of days the roof was installed – providing cover for the builders. Today the windows are being inserted. It’s taking shape pretty quickly and I wonder if the owners are coming by regularly to watch this house being constructed, getting excited with every new development and looking forward to making a home out of the building.
And I wonder how the various builders feel about what they are constructing. From nothing, a dwelling for people. They probably take it in their stride – but I think it is quite amazing – all the skills that go into this event. And then they finish and go onto the next one. I wonder if at the end of a working life, a builder ever counts up all the homes/buildings they have been involved in producing? And thought about all the people who have lived in/worked in what they have built with their own hands?
In our reading from Jeremiah, the prophet speaks of human beings being known by God even before being conceived in their mother’s womb. And the psalmist talks of God as being the one who brings him out of his mother’s womb. Like the builder of a home, the dwelling place that is each of us, known by God and built by God from before the beginning of life.
And it is Paul who, in his famous, ‘hymn of love’, assures Christ followers, that the love of God, perfected in Christ, will never end. We are loved eternally, when, Paul promises, we finally see clearly that love, which has known us from the start.
Praise to God, the builder of us all.
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany 3 - Mary and Jesus - Faith and Risk
On the third day there was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. Jesus and his disciples had also been invited to the wedding. When the wine gave out, the mother of Jesus said to him, ‘They have no wine.’ And Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, what concern is that to you and to me? My hour has not yet come.’ His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever he tells you.’ John 2:1-5
Probably like many of you, this week I watched the news reports of Australian children lining up to get their first Covid vaccine jab. As the parents caressed their children’s heads gently as they waited in line it occurred to me that I was watching a great gesture of faith in action. That of the parents - faith that the advances in medical science and public health would help protect their loved children as they went about their normal life in the future. Faith that was worth the risk of vaccination. And trust and faith in the parents on behalf of the children that getting a needle, not something that they would look forward to, was going to help them in the long run. The children I saw looked remarkably upbeat about the whole process!
When ‘the mother of Jesus’ instructs Jesus to do something about the lack of wine at a wedding feast in Cana, the response of Jesus in some ways sounds like a child saying ‘no, I don’t want to!!’. Yet she persists and tells the stewards to ‘do what he says.’
Mary has faith in her son, she knows that he is able to perform the sign that will show that God is with him. And in the end, despite his initial objection, Jesus must have had faith in his mother, as he performs the sign. The sign that points to the God of wonderful, overwhelming generosity as the large barrels of water turn into the finest of wine for the gathered guests.
But rather than leading to the healthy future of her beloved son, Mary must have known that the performing of the sign, while it would draw followers and believers in the message of Jesus, would also draw unwelcome attention and condemnation. Both Mary and Jesus would have known what they were starting with the miracle at Cana. Yet, they both step out into the spotlight, with faith in their God, knowing the risks.
We have much to be grateful for in this mother’s action. Her ministry by her son’s side may have been sidelined and obscured by many centuries of ‘history’, but her action highlights that a journey of faith in God requires courage to face what may come. Not only for ourselves but those we love. And I acknowledge the faith in the loving parents and their children that I saw on my TV screen this week.
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany 2 - An ill wind is blowing?
Reflection for Second Sunday of Epiphany – the baptism of the Lord
“His winnowing fork is in his hand the clear his threshing-floor and to gather the wheat into his barn, but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire” Luke 3:17
I’m watching the remnant of Cyclone Seth buffet tree branches early in the week with a new appreciation after learning how ancient Eastern harvesting practices used a judicious amount of good wind to separate wheat seeds from stalks.
First of all, the gathered grain from a variety of fields was placed on a large and open space – the threshing floor - usually located on or near a hill. Cattle were then yoked together and led over the grain, their hooves crushing the stalks which released the seeds.
The mixture was then winnowed – using a large hand-held fork. The mixture was tossed up into the air where the wind did its work. The lighter chaff was usually blown away, followed by the straw. The heavier seeds, the wheat grain, fell back down again to the floor.
This process was repeated again and again until the wind blew little of the air-borne mixture away. This final mixture on the threshing floor contained three levels – the bottom rich in seeds, the second straw and the top layer chaff. Final separation of the three levels was done by hand sieving.
The straw could be used further. The remaining chaff was of no use and was disposed of by burning.
On the surface, it would appear that John’s description of the work of the Messiah to the gathered Israelites in Luke’s gospel sounds more like a warning than good news of the kingdom of God being close at hand.
“He will baptize you with Holy Spirit and fire.” Luke 3:16c
But he was foretelling of the Holy Spirit, the wind that would be blowing through God’s gathered people coming for baptism, cleansing and purifying with a final fire. And the end result was a closeness to God – the gathering of the wheat into his barn.
Treasured precious seed.
As the weeks and the Omicron strain progress we may feel like we are being buffeted by an ill wind that continually changes. In this truly unsettling time we hold onto the promise of God who is faithful and who has promised that in our baptism in Christ Jesus we are the most treasured seed, called to grow and spread the good news that no matter what happens God is truly with us all.
So we hold on to this promise, sisters and brothers in Christ. And pray for all people who call Australia home as we negotiate the new reality we face.
Blessings
Ceri
Epiphany - What Shall We Bring?
Epiphany – What Shall We Bring?
In our church calendar, the Christmas Season lasts for 12 days – from December 25th until the evening of January 5th. You may remember the song – ‘On the Twelve Days of Christmas My True Love Gave to Me…..’
January 6th is the start of a new church season – the season of Epiphany – and is marked by the scriptural appearance of the Magi, or wise men:
“In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, asking, ‘Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage.’ Matthew 2:1-2
Strangers, non-Jews (gentiles in biblical speak), responding to the rising of a star, travelling from a long distance, arriving at last in the city of Jerusalem. Their eagerness to see the child whose star had led them on the journey so evident in their approach to one who they believed would know the exact location of this miraculous child.
King Herod.
With hindsight we may not think that the men were particularly wise in the ways of power – Herod is truly frightened by their request and, I imagine, worried of a challenger to his own power base.
But indeed, the men were right. Herod did know – once he consulted his own leaders and the prophets of old – Bethlehem was the answer. And we read further of the wise men’s overwhelming joy at the arrival at the house where Mary and Jesus are living, followed by kneeling and paying homage with the offering of gifts from their treasure-chests – gold, frankincense and myrrh.
In some cultures, the Epiphany is called the ‘Little Christmas’. And the gift giving – to children – does not happen until the 6th of January in remembrance of the story of the wise men. The 25th of December is the day that families get together to share a meal and attend a church service.
I’m sure that in our own culture, there could be much salivating over the thought of being able to introduce another ‘Christmas’ into the consumer calendar – (remember how seamlessly American’s Black Friday sales appeared in Australia a few years ago). Or maybe the opposite – try telling people (especially little ones) that they have to wait another 12 days for presents!
Hmmmmm…..we might shudder at either possibility!
However, for Christ followers, the scriptural appearance of the wise men makes us glad in our hearts that strangers welcomed Jesus into the world where rejection and cruelty would lurk in the wings.
And reminds us that, as well as our prayers for healing and wholeness for ourselves and others, we are also to bring our own gifts to God through Christ.
What are we to bring? Praise and giving thanks, we are told, are a great start!
Blessings
Ceri